96-4 Top-Down Constraints on Regional-Scale Indirect N2O Emissions.
See more from this Division: Special Sessions
See more from this Session: Special Session Symposium--How Can We Improve Our Estimates of Indirect N2O Emissions?
Monday, October 23, 2017: 2:35 PM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 21
Abstract:
Nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions within the US Corn Belt have been estimated to be 200-900% larger than predictions from emission inventories, implying that one or more source categories in bottom-up approaches are underestimated. Our research has focused on constraining the indirect emissions associated with runoff and leaching using bottom-up and top-down approaches. Here we interpret hourly N2O mixing ratios measured from 2010 to 2015 at a tall tower using a time-inverted transport model and a scale factor Bayesian inverse modeling approach to help constrain direct and indirect agricultural emissions. The tall tower measurements and analyses show large inter-annual variability in N2O emissions (316 to 585 Gg N2O-N y-1). This implies that the regional emission factors are highly sensitive to climate. In the warmest year and spring (2012) of the observational period, the emission factor was 7.5%, nearly double previous reports. Indirect emissions associated with runoff and leaching dominated the inter-annual variability of the total emissions, with results suggesting that indirect emissions represent 40 to 60% of the total agricultural budget—substantially larger than that estimated from bottom-up inventory approaches. These findings are supported with a new bottom-up modeling approach involving the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT). Here, emissions from zero and first order streams in a catchment in southern Minnesota represented 25 to 50% of the direct N2O emissions.
See more from this Division: Special Sessions
See more from this Session: Special Session Symposium--How Can We Improve Our Estimates of Indirect N2O Emissions?